Member Reviews

I thought that this book was great!

It is well written and it was easy for my daughter to read and follow but she is older and I think that some of the wording in the book is better for children around her age - she was 7 in July. It is a bit wordy in my view for children younger than that and I don't think there would not be the same level of enjoyment.

The good has some talking points and a great theme to the story as well and as a mum I thought that it was great and the moral to the story was spot on and I liked the focus on sharing and not being selfish, as well as understanding the implications from actions.

The illustrations in the book were wonderful and they really brought the story to life.

It is 4 stars from me for this one - highly recommended!

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It's a cute little story with a wonderful lesson. Illustrations are also so cute and dreamy.😍 Like it. 💜
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My thanks to Austin Macauley and NetGalley for the DRC of “Hazel and Her Sun”.

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Hazel is a little girl who loves Sun so much. She is so fond of Sun that she even hatched a plan to steal it for herself. Whenever, she gets the chance, she start looking at Sun with an amaze and start thinking for how she could have it. She tried asking her mother for a big fishbowl to keep it but denied so she planned for Ginormous goldfish to pet and got her large fishbowl from her mother.
She snatched the Sun from the sky and keep it in her room but when she went out to her school and rest of the house, she realised people are sad without Sun and complete world around her is became dark as it never meant to be hers alone.

But then, there is a twist. Read this picture-book to know what happened next?

This is a moral story for young kids to learn on the value of nature and it's resources for the world. KG students would surely love this and let them learn the importance of empathy as well.

However, the division of paras on pages seemed quite improper. Somewhere there was 8-10 lines and somewhere only 2 or 1. It is okay if this goes only as a narration for children from their teachers or parents, but for the self reading for the targeted reading kids of 4-6 years of age, it would be hard to hold on to.

Overall, it is good picture book with average but apt illustrations.

I would rate it for 4.5/5.0

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The beginning of this book is very promising. Hazel loves and plays with the sun. After the first five or six pages, the story gets very wordy. It started out as a lovely simple story and turned into an overdone complicated mess. The illustrations are lovely. They have a 70s feeling that really gives that sunny type of charm. If only the story could have stayed in simple sentences instead of getting overburdened by its own words.

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Hazel and Her Sun is a unique story about a little girl who wants to keep the sun. I love the colour palette that was used in the illustrations. It fits the story so perfectly and really is one of the highlights for me.

I like the overall moral of the story and would read this with my children.

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Loved Hazel and Her Sun. Great book to teach kids that sometimes what they want is not always what is best. I love how Hazel works through her feelings and empathizes. Wonderful addition to any elementary classroom.

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In a Nutshell: A beautiful and imaginative picture book about a little girl who wants the sun for herself. Lovely plot, nice illustrations, valuable moral. Recommended!

Plot Preview:
Hazel loves the sun and watches it every time she can. In fact, she loves it so much that she begins hatching a secret plan to steal the sun and keep it in her room. When she succeeds in capturing the sun, she realises that she forgot to take something important into account: the sun is not hers alone.

This is the kind of creative story that little children enjoy with all the strength of their young imaginations and their firm belief in the magical. Hazel’s adventure will offer little minds a lot to think about. However, let’s be clear that the story is not scientifically and practically accurate. So it is to be read not for factual preciseness but for its magical plot and the beautiful moral.

Hazel is a sweet character whose single-minded passion for the sun results in this misadventure for the world. The book shows her as a resourceful child who rectifies her mistake as soon as she realises it. The story depicts how every decision has repercussions and we should always think not just from our needs but also from a general and long-term perspective.

The ending of the story works especially well not just because of the message but also because of how it casts doubt on certain events that occurred before. A good way to continue discussing the story after the last page!

The illustrations are also really cute and match the story perfectly. The contrast between bright and dull works in sync with the text.

The only main thing that I would have altered is the text distribution. Some pages have only one line of text while some others have 8-10 lines of text without para spacing. These longer text blocks might be a bit overwhelming for beginner-level independent readers.

I wish the book could have ended with some interesting facts about the sun. As the story is so fantastical, it would have been great to learn some fun trivia about the star that lights up Hazel’s world and ours.

Overall, a really sweet book to be read with the eyes and heart of a child. This story would work well as a bedtime story for little readers aged 3-6. Amazon has this book pegged as being for children aged 6-8, so that might be the age range for independent reading. I feel that the fanciful nature of the story makes it suitable to the younger segment.

4 stars.

My thanks to Austin Macauley and NetGalley for the DRC of “Hazel and Her Sun”. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.

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I loved the idea of this story but was too wordy for me. I also would have loved more of the characteristics of the sun in the story. It only talks about it being loved for the light. Heat is a big part if the sun. Missed opportunity for science to be integrated in the story.

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